Tag: polio-free

  • ‘Nigeria will be polio-free in 6 months’

    Nigeria will be polio-free in the next six months, Executive Director of the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA), Dr. Faisal Shuaib, has declared.

    He spoke at briefing commemorating the 2019 African Vaccination Week (AVW) attended by the Country Representative for the World Health Organisation (WHO), Dr. Clement Peter; Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) Champion for Africa on Immunization and CEO Avon Medical Limited, Dr. Awele Elumelu, and Country Coordinator for GAVI, Nadia Lasri, among others.

    Shuaib said: “Because we have been innovative and creative with routine immunisations, we are now at a point where we are just some six months away from being declared polio-free in Nigeria.”

    He commended the efforts of President Muhammadu Buhari and the Federal Ministry of Health in the effective progress made in immunisation coverage, noting the increase of routine immunization coverage rates from 48 percent in 2015 to 57 percent in 2018.

    “Immunisation is critical for building a resilient health system under the visionary leadership of Buhari, and the strategic and policy direction of the honorable Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole,” he stated.

    READ ALS0: Kano free of polio in 53 months

    “For the first time in Nigeria we are seeing a consistent and compelling improvement in the number of kids we are reaching with lifesaving vaccines. We have surpassed all historic expectations in immunisations,” he stressed.

    He complained that lack of awareness and fear of vaccination of caregivers and the poor attitude of health workers weak effective immunisation.

    He urged parents and caregivers of children to make available the kids for vaccination to prevent disease epidemics and early death, assuring that all vaccines used in Nigeria are WHO and NAFDAC certified.

    “The measles outbreaks we have seen in the last few months underscore the need for parents to make available their kids for vaccinations every time there is a campaign,” he said.

    “This is the fewest number of measles outbreak in Nigeria ever.

    “We are here to celebrate AVW as we do every year, to emphasise for routine immunisation to protect kids and women from vaccine preventable diseases. We are also here to celebrate the efforts of vaccine heroes.

    “We look forward to a day when no man woman or child in Nigeria will die from measles, meningitis, or any other vaccine-preventable disease again.”

    Also speaking at the occasion, Dr. Mrs. Awele Elumelu, disclosed while Gavi has been able to immunise almost 300 million children in Nigeria since their inception in 2000, preventing about 10 million deaths, there remains about 9 million unimmunized children in Nigeria.

    She also hampered on the importance of the private sector in enhancing healthcare coverage in the country.

  • Medical practitioner wants Nigeria to be polio-free

    Dr Towoju Olumunyiwa, a medical practitioner with National Hospital, Abuja, has called on Federal Government to embrace measures that could make Nigeria polio-free.

    He made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja yesterday.

    He said that government needed to put a lot of resources together with its partners to make sure that polio was completely eradicated in the country.

    According to him, India is far bigger than Nigeria, but India has been able to eradicate polio since 2012.

    “India was able to eradicate polio in 2012. India is bigger than Nigeria and if we talk of resources, we have enough resources as India, so why can’t we eradicate polio?

    “Nigeria was about to eradicate polio in 2016, but unfortunately there were diagnoses in Borno and for a country to be free of polio it has to be free for three years.

    “We were delisted in 2016, so by this year if there are no any diagnoses, then we will join the rest of the world to be declared as polio-free.

     

    Olumunyiwa said that even though there had been a remarkable progress in the eradication, but 99 per cent success was still a failure.

    According to the medical practitioner  it is necessary to take serious measures to prevent polio in the country.

    “Let the coverage of routine immunisation be in every state, local government and community in the country.

    “The Federal Government and other stakeholders should make sure that we don’t get another diagnosis just about the time that we are about to be declared polio-free,” he said.

     

  • I wont give up until Nigeria becomes polio free -Dangote

    Penultimate week, Aliko Dangote, the African business mogul and his American counterpart, Bill Gates embarked on troubleshooting trips across and beyond Nigeria in their quest to ensure Nigeria becomes polio free. For the Africa’s riches man, “It is quite embarrassing that Nigeria is one of the only three countries in the world that are yet to be certified polio free.” The other two being Pakistan and Afghanistan.

    Therefore, for the whole week Dangote Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which have been at the fore front as private sector partners in the process of elimination of polio, went on assessment of the situation in the areas earlier affected by the disease and the neighbouring Chad Republic, where the two and their teams met with President Idris Deby and other key government officials in Ndjamena.

    Polio is a crippling and potentially fatal infectious disease. It is an infectious viral disease that affects the central nervous system and can cause temporary or permanent paralysis, most especially in the leg. Children not older than 5 years are more likely to contract the virus than any other group, therefore the epidemic inflicts economic loss of colossal dimension on a nation as youths, the future generation, which forms a plank of the productive population are affected.

    Polio is caused by a highly contagious virus specific to humans. The virus usually enters the environment in the feces of someone who is infected. In areas with poor sanitation, the virus easily spreads through the fecal-oral route, via contaminated water or food. In addition, direct contact with a person infected with the virus can cause polio. The infection with poliovirus and direct contact with persons increase the risk.

    According to World Health Organisation (WHO), a country is regarded as polio free if no cases have been detected for a year. However, no cases of the virus have been reported in the last sixteen months in Nigeria but it is feared that it is still possible polio circulates under some prevailing circumstances as was the case, where a particular strain of virus resurfaced after five years in 2016 which professionals adduced to inadequate surveillance and under-vaccinated populations. Even a single case is considered an epidemic.

    Over the years, Dangote Foundation has been involved in causes that guarantee healthy life for the Nigerian child and reduce extreme poverty among the vulnerable especially women. It was in this spirit that he had deployed his resources, for critical interventions, among which are issues bordering on nutrition, routine immunization and commitment to eradicate polio.

    The Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) described as multiple factors hampering eradication of the virus especially in the North. Many of the factors, it stated in one of its report on Polio eradication, are embedded in the country’s broad social-political dynamics and enduring chasm between the governed and the government and a decentralized governmental system that often neglect service delivery to marginalized communities.

    Some of the obstacles to polio eradication in Nigeria as in many other countries are the lack of basic health infrastructure, which limits vaccine distribution and delivery, the crippling effects of internal strife occasioned by insurgents’ activities which has turned some areas in the North-East as hard-reach.

    The visit to Chad was necessitated by the fact that Chad is next to Nigeria from North East axis where immunization penetration has been very difficult. Any movement of the virus across the border might put Chad into jeopardy hence the need to intensify immunization in the country especially in the islands close to the insurgents’ enclave.

    Besides Chad is said to be spending less than before on vaccines and routine immunization operational costs – both in absolute terms as well as a proportion of total expenditures. Therefore, both Dangote and Gates were able to obtain commitment from Mr. Deby to personally track the ability of the polio program to access and actually go to all 800 Chadian islands in the lake Convince with a promise to step up his political and financial support for routine immunization.

    The Chadian President then signed a declaration, committing to increase immunization rates in Chad and end polio in the region. Though Chad has not seen a case of wild polio since 2012, a 2016 polio outbreak in Nigeria placed those in neighbouring countries at risk, particularly children who live on the hard-to-reach islands of Lake Chad.

    President Déby reaffirmed his support to the region-wide effort to stop polio. “Improving the health of Chad’s children is critical. I am committed to working with neighbouring governments to end polio for good in Africa, and to protecting more of our country’s children with vaccines against other deadly diseases.”

    After the signing Dangote said all countries in the region—including Chad—share a responsibility to protect every child with polio vaccine. Until this happens, the risk of wild polio cases spreading remains.

    Said he:”We are close to stopping polio on the continent – but we are not done yet. We want to save the lives of 250, 000 child with application of right vaccines. Unless we protect all children in Africa with the polio vaccine, the risk of the virus spreading will remain. That is why the Dangote Foundation is determined to continue working with Nigeria’s neighbours including Chad, to improve immunization rates and end polio for good.”

    He stated that Polio eradication is a must because it is a disease that causes paralysis and in some instances, death. Thirty years ago, it paralyzed an estimated 350,000 people – last year there were just 22 cases confined to Afghanistan and Pakistan, a record low. But, the fight against polio is not over until there are no cases anywhere in the world for at least three years.

    “As a Nigerian, I feel that I have a special responsibility to make sure that Africa is free from polio since my country has been the one exporting the virus for so many years.

    “The polio outbreak in Borno a year and a half ago was a big setback. And a lot of work has been done to get it under control. Including your country. But I’m concerned especially about the risks that still remain. Nigeria cannot reach thousands of settlements, and its islands in Lake Chad because of Boko Haram. And until we do, you will need to be super vigilant on your side.

    “One of the risks I see are the islands on your side in Lake Chad. As Bill mentioned, they are difficult to reach, and they have not been visited on a regular basis by the polio program. I think it would be very helpful if you gave instructions for the military to help transport vaccinators to each of the islands we’ve been talking about – so that they are all visited at least 3-5 times this year. With logistics and planning support from the military, I think you can take the final steps to ensure Chad remains polio-free.

    “If you personally lead a public review of the program every six months – with the Ministers of Health, Interior, Finance and Communication – along with the Governors and administration, traditional and religious leaders, it would send a clear signal that it is not business as usual. I would be happy to come back for your first review, if you conduct it mid-year.

    “Like Nigeria, Chad needs to spend more of its own money on routine immunization. If we cannot immunize our own children to protect them from disease, they have failed them. My recommendation is that you establish a clear budget line for routine immunization in the annual budget at least 40%. That would get you back to the level of commitment the government was making in 2012. Bill and I will work hard with the global partners to try to secure the rest.

    From Chad, the teams arrived Sokoto where they met with the Sultan, Alhaji Saad Abubakar and the community heads as well six governors from the Northern region on renewed commitment to intensify immunization to ward of the polio virus and take Nigeria off the list of polio countries.

    While thanking the Sultan for his steadfast commitment in ensuring that Nigeria is polio free, Dangote lamented that despite all efforts being made to ensure the immunization reached majority of the targeted populace, not much ground has been covered. In his own state of Kano for instance, routine immunization coverage 16 per cent while that of Sokoto is less than 5%.

     

     

    While vaccines, staff and funding are available, the coverage is not moving and has been abysmally low. “It’s both a demand and poor service quality problem. We cannot make progress on the demand side without traditional leaders.” The challenge, he said is to get all settlement heads (mai-angwas) to line list and identify all eligible children, and meet monthly with the local health facility to determine who is and is not coming for immunization.

    “Our biggest challenge in rolling out this strategy is that settlement heads expect to get paid.”. Dangote told the Sultan to come in forcefully to let the settlement heads know that asking for money before mobilizing their children for immunization would only compound the problem and not in keeping with the traditional role of settlement heads. If the Sultan can take a very public stand that all settlement heads must support routine immunization and meet monthly with health staff without remuneration.

    “But we know that the fight is not yet won, and I would like to reiterate Bill’s point that you and the Emirs in all six states request a joint meeting with your Governors, LGA Chairmen and District Heads this month to review the state of preparations for the April and May national polio campaigns.  Every detail counts in preparation and execution.

    “With our current very low rates of immunization, we know that most of our dear young children remain unprotected from vaccine preventable disease such as measles, yellow fever, whooping cough, and more. We need your help in changing this.”

    At the Sokoto Government house six governors of Kaduna, Bornu, Yobe, Sokoto, Bauchi and Kano signed a Memorandum of Understanding extending their commitment to counterpart responsibilities including funding to deepening coverage of immunization in their respective state.

    However before signing the MoU, the Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole gave a presentation on the immunization coverage in the areas.

    Dangote urged the governors not to be distracted by the coming electioneering but to keep focus on the polio endgame.  “That means we should keep the counter-part funding commitments; that we ensure the April and May campaigns are done well, and that LGA Chairmen and District Heads are involved in preparations and implementation of the campaigns.

    “I am delighted to be here to sign these extensions and a letter of intent.  It signals that we are taking a development mindset to keep building our routine immunization programs as we begin to focus on broader primary health care. It means that Your Excellences, our Traditional Fathers, Honorable Commissioners, Development Partners, we are all in this together, through thick and thin. Bill and I have seen amazing things happen in Nigeria with turning polio around—when people said it couldn’t be done. We know that the routine immunization and Primary Health Care work is much different, much more complex, and requires long term dedication.  It also requires us to keep our passion and motivation high.  It requires a sense of urgency to overtake a most dangerous and infectious disease.

  • Aregbesola to make Osun polio free

    Aregbesola to make Osun polio free

    As the national strategy for child survival through mass immunisation to eradicate childhood killer diseases, including poliomyelitis, began at the weekend nationwide, Osun State government has promised to make the state free of the disease.

    At the launch in Osogbo, Governor Rauf Aregbesola said since the inception of his administration, the state has been free of polio, adding that “it is our desire to ensure it remains so.”

    Represented by the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Health, Dr. Akinyinka Esho, the governor said health facilities had been stocked with vaccine and other materials for the exercise, noting that immunisation is free.

    He said: “Health workers will go from house to house to administer two drops of oral polio vaccine (OPV) to children between ages 0 and five years. For mothers who visit our health facilities, there are other vaccines available for their babies.”

  • ‘Nigeria polio-free feat unprecedented’

    ROTARY International District 9110 Governor Otunba Bola Onabadejo has described as unprecedented the nation’s polio-free year.

    If the tempo is maintained for the next two years, Onabadejo said, the country will be removed from the list of countries that are polio-prone.

    To mark the historic event, he planted a tree.

    He spoke at a briefing at the group’s headquarters in Ikeja GRA, Lagos.

    He said: “This is the day we have been waiting for, to see that we didn’t see any recurrence of polio. Since 1985, we started the journey of polio eradication in the country. Today, Nigeria is off it. It is significant and that is why we are marking it.’’ He said the last case of polio virus infection was recorded in Kano State on July 24, last year.

    He said the organisation’s aim was that the country’s name is knocked off the list of endemic countries, adding that this was achievable with better surveillance, non-complacent on its efforts on immunisation and more enlightenment.

    Onabadejo, who promised at his installation to ‘’stamp out polio’’, explained the importance of the tree planting.  He said any one who planted a tree expected it to grow and mature and that this was possible with daily watering, noting that Rotary’s members would not rest on its oars of care to achieve this laudable goal.

    Former District Governor Tayo Alabi, who described the day as joyful, said the Rotary family was happy because it fulfilled the promise it made to Nigerians that it would eradicate polio from the country.

    He recalled that 10 years ago, there were 1000 cases of polio, but that by last year, the figure had been drastically reduced to six.

    Since 2014, he said, no case had been recorded.

    “And so, it is a day of joy,’’ he said, adding that the body’s periscope is trained on 2017, when, it hoped, Nigeria would be declared polio-free by the World Health Organisation (WHO).

    Chairman, Nigeria National Plus Committee Dr Tunji Funsho described the event as ’a great day’, adding that Rotary’s 20-year-old dream had been achieved. He said the feat did not come easy and there were some challenges which they eventually surmounted. Thanking their donors, partners and his colleagues for their support, he said their contributions were unquantifiable. So far, he said about $1. 5million had been spent on polio eradication. He also thanked the government for its support, saying that Rotary wants more of its support. He urged parents to ensure that their children were immunised.

    Funsho added:  “We have proved that it can be done.  If we become complacent, it won’t be good.’’

  • ‘To be polio-free, more immunisation needed’

    ‘To be polio-free, more immunisation needed’

    VICTORY beckons, but more vigilance is needed.

    That was the message of experts on polio, of which the country could soon be declared free.

    “A great deal rests in the hands of Nigeria’s new government,” said the Independent Monitoring Board of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative.

    “With strong commitment, there is good potential that Nigeria will eradicate polio within their terms, and will be able to celebrate a great Nigerian victory.

    “But if the polio programme loses momentum or support, the country could be responsible not only for polio coming back to Nigeria, but elsewhere in Africa too.”

    Nigeria needs to be resilient and committed to the campaign to kick the polio virus out of the country for good, the experts said.

    “Nigeria’s success in polio eradication under the present governments should be hinged on stronger routine immunisation using the polio infrastructure, and improved surveillance, and any case of paralysis should be reported and investigated. The present administration needs to commit  to making funds available for ensuring that polio vaccine is available at all times.

    “State governments ought to take immunisation as a priority and commit their own counterpart funds, so also should local governments.

    “This is also the case for routine immunisation where a vast majority of the primary healthcare centres have little or no presence of health workers. Electricity and other facilities for maintaining vaccines within the cold chain are near absent, or with the limited quantity only supplied by donors and development partners like UNICEF, WHO, among others. Non-compliance rate and international border synchronisation activities are more challenging. That is why Nigeria needs to build resilience to stay polio-free until 2017, and then it can be certified.”

    Journalists in Kebbi, Sokoto and Zamfara states have also called for adequate budgetary allocations for the Polio Eradication Initiative (PEI) in the country.

    The journalists made the call at the end of a two-day media capacity building meeting on strategies to interrupt the transmission of the wild polio virus.

    The meeting, organised by UNICEF, held at Dankani Hotel Sokoto, with no fewer than 44 journalists attending.

    Again, immunisation was the focus, with a view to saving more children.

    The journalists called for accountability and stronger commitment by policymakers and other stakeholders.

    They also urged media practitioners and their organisations to continue to utilise their positions in the society to strengthen and sustain the polio eradication and other child-survival programmes.

    The resolution also urged journalists to build their skills to enhance networking through social media and other emerging technologies to boost their news reports and programmes.

    On their part, they pledged to be more passionate and professional in the campaign to eradicate the polio virus from the country.

    UNICEF Chief Field officer, Mohammed Muhiuddin said that for Nigeria to combat the disease, the media needs to be actively involved.

    The MD, Kaduna State Media Corporation (KSMC) Mrs Tammy  advised journalists to play active roles in the fight against the polio virus.

  • ‘Nigeria will be polio-free in seven months’

    Nigeria will be declared polio-free in seven months, according to Dr Yewande Adeshina, Special Adviser to  Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola on  Health.

    She spoke at flag-off of first  round of this year’s national immunisation  plus days at the Ikeja Local Government Area of Lagos State.

    Nigeria,  she said, would be polio free in seven months if it does not  record any new case during the period.

    “In three years’ time, we will officially be declared free of polio. It is good to know that since 2009 when we had like 200 cases, we only had six cases last year and so far we have not had any and there are seven more months to say  we have not had any new case in a whole year, which puts us on another level. This is why we must all come together to take Nigeria off the list of countries that are causing the menace of polio in the world,” she said.

    Dr Adeshina said  states were expected to key into the Federal Government polio eradication initiative, adding that Lagos has adopted measures for doing so.

    She said: “In Lagos State, we are doing beyond the flagging-off, which is recommended. We have embarked on massive media campaign to increase the awareness on the importance and safety of polio immunisation. Jingles are being aired, local government areas and social mobilisers  have been moving within the communities to sensitise and mobilise the citizens, town announcements, community dialogues, church/mosque announcements, sensitisations with schools, and advocacy meetings with local government executives and key traditional and religious leaders have been and are being carried out.

    “We are also using the house to house and transit components, which will administer only OPV to children between zero to 59 months irrespective of their immunisation status.”

    She encouraged parents to take their children to Ikeja local Government or  the Primary Health Care Clinics for vaccines and other scheduled immunisations, adding that this would protect them against preventable  killer-diseases.

    She called on mothers, community, traditional and religious leaders to ensure that every child  receives the necessary polio and other scheduled immunisations.

    Ikeja Local Government Executive Secretary  Adekunle Dally-Adeokun said immunisation is the right of every child, adding that no eligible child should be exempted because it would prevent outbreak of poliomyelitis in the state.

     

  • Nigeria to be polio-free soon, says minister

    Nigeria to be polio-free soon, says minister

    HEALTH Minister Dr. Halliru Alhassan said yesterday the country will be certified polio-free this month.

    Alhassan spoke to reporters in Sokoto while reviewing some activities of his ministry last year.

    According to him, no case of polio has been recorded in the country in the last six months, stressing that this qualifies the country to be declared polio-free in line with global requirements.

    “This is because only six cases of the wild polio virus (WPV) were recorded in the last six months in Kano and Jigawa states.

    “This feat is a remarkable departure from the nearly 52 WPV cases the country recorded during the same period under review in 2013.

    “With this happy development, we are optimistic that Nigeria will be completing the six months required to be declared polio-free by this month,’’ the minister said.

    The country, he added, has made tremendous progress in ensuring the total eradication of polio, vowing that it would be sustained.

    ‘’The Federal Government would sustain these successes; we have eradicated Ebola and Guinea worm; and polio is on the verge of becoming history in Nigeria,’’ Alhassan added.

    He was happy that the nation has recorded reduction in maternal mortality through the support of the Millennium Development Goals.